logo
Raskin launches probe of McIver charges in ICE facility scuffle

Raskin launches probe of McIver charges in ICE facility scuffle

The Hill03-06-2025
Rep. Jamie Raskin (Md.), the top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, is launching an investigation into the charges filed against Rep. LaMonica McIver (D-N.J.) and the mayor of Newark, N.J., saying the move appears to violate Justice Department policy.
McIver was charged last month after a scuffle with Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officers outside an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility after they began to arrest Newark Mayor Ras Baraka (D).
Alina Habba, the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey and former personal attorney to President Trump, charged McIver with assaulting law enforcement, saying she used her forearms to push back against agents.
Habba's office has already moved to dismiss the trespassing charges initially filed against Baraka, earning a reprimand from the judge in the case who cited an 'apparent rush in this case, culminating…in the embarrassing retraction of charges.'
'Ms. Habba's unprecedented charging decision is a blatant attempt to intimidate Members of Congress and to deter us from carrying out our constitutional oversight duties. It appears Ms. Habba brought these charges in violation of long-standing Department of Justice (DOJ) policies designed to prevent exactly this type of politically motivated abuse of prosecutorial power,' Raskin wrote.
Raskin fired off a series of questions about the charges brought against both McIver and Baraka.
That includes whether there was any contact with the Public Integrity Section of the Justice Department.
'DOJ prosecutors must consult with the Public Integrity Section before initiating an investigation of Members of Congress and must seek the Section's approval before bringing charges. 21 Reports suggest, however, that Ms. Habba did not,' Raskin wrote.
'The consultation requirement is designed to guard against a rampant Executive Branch weaponizing the vast apparatus of federal law enforcement against the President's perceived enemies, or even the perception that a DOJ investigation or prosecution was motivated by improper political purpose. The Justice Manual is clear that approval from the Public Integrity Section is required before charging a Member of Congress with a crime based on actions taken in their official capacity.'
The Justice Department said it is considering removing the requirement that prosecutors first consult with the Public Integrity Section.
Raskin asks the DOJ whom Habba consulted before bringing charges, if she coordinated with Trump or any White House staff, and to turn over all communications regarding the charges.
For her part, McIver has denied any wrongdoing and noted she rejected a plea deal from Habba, saying it pushed her to 'admit to doing something that I did not do.'
'I came there to do my job and conduct an oversight visit, and they wanted me to say something differently, and I'm not doing that. I'm not going to roll over and stop doing my job because they don't want me to, or they want to neglect the fact that we needed to be in there to see what was going on and that detention center, and so, absolutely, no, I was not going to do that,' McIver said during an appearance last month on CNN.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

DOJ indicts suspect who went viral for delivering protective gear to anti-ICE protesters on live TV
DOJ indicts suspect who went viral for delivering protective gear to anti-ICE protesters on live TV

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

DOJ indicts suspect who went viral for delivering protective gear to anti-ICE protesters on live TV

A man who went viral after he was captured on live TV allegedly dropping off a pickup truck full of face shields for protesters to use amid demonstrations and riots in Los Angeles last month was indicted Wednesday. Alejandro Orellana, 29, is charged with conspiracy to aid and abet civil disorders. La Officials Charge Over 40 Anti-ice Protesters Who Allegedly Assaulted Officers, Horses And Threatened Child Federal prosecutors said Orellana met up with other people on June 9 to load up his Ford F-150 pickup truck with Uvex brand Bionic Face Shields, masks, water bottles and other items as anti-ICE protests raged in Los Angeles. He then drove the truck to a crowd of protesters and distributed the items, the Justice Department said. "We have made it a huge priority to try to identify, locate and arrest those who are involved in organizing, supporting, funding or facilitating these riots," U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli told Fox News at the time of Orellana's arrest. Read On The Fox News App La Anti-ice Rioters Face New Charges As Violence Rages "It appears they're well-orchestrated and coordinated and well-funded, so we want to understand who these people are and where this organization's coming from, and today was one of those first arrests, the key arrests that we did," he added. A group Orellana is allegedly associated with, CENTRO CSO, is raising funds for his legal defense and is planning a protest on Thursday to demand the charges against him are dropped. "Orellana is facing 5 years for protesting ICE Raids, Protesting is Not a Crime! Alejandro did nothing wrong!" the group wrote on Instagram. Locally, more than 40 people have been charged with offenses stemming from violent riots against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) efforts last month. The charges came after protests and riots erupted in and around Los Angeles amid the Trump administration's mass deportation operations targeting criminal illegal article source: DOJ indicts suspect who went viral for delivering protective gear to anti-ICE protesters on live TV

Kilmar Abrego Garcia describes ‘severe beatings' and ‘psychological torture' in Salvadoran prison
Kilmar Abrego Garcia describes ‘severe beatings' and ‘psychological torture' in Salvadoran prison

Politico

time3 hours ago

  • Politico

Kilmar Abrego Garcia describes ‘severe beatings' and ‘psychological torture' in Salvadoran prison

The Salvadoran prison where Abrego was initially housed, known as the Anti-Terrorism Confinement Center or by its Spanish-language acronym CECOT, is reputed to be rife with gang violence and human rights abuses. But there are few first-hand accounts of treatment there because El Salvador's president, Nayib Bukele, has vowed that its prisoners will never be released. Abrego's account of physical and psychological torture stands in stark contrast to the portrayal by the Trump administration and Bukele, who posted a photo of what he claimed was Abrego having 'margaritas' with Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), after the senator secured a meeting with Abrego in April. (Van Hollen has since said the margaritas were staged by Salvadoran officials). The Trump administration told a federal judge in May, after Abrego had been moved out of CECOT to another prison, that he was 'in good health' and had 'gained weight.' But Abrego said he lost 31 pounds at CECOT in his first two weeks there. And he reported witnessing and suffering harrowing violence and abuse. Abrego's lawyers presented his account in a 40-page proposed amendment to a lawsuit over his deportation. Spokespeople for the White House and for the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to requests for comments on Abrego's new claims. Abrego allegedly entered the U.S. illegally around 2011 and had lived in Maryland for more than a decade when the Trump administration deported him. The deportation violated a 2019 order from an immigration judge who barred the U.S. from sending Abrego to El Salvador because he faced a danger of gang violence there. The Supreme Court noted that the deportation was 'illegal' after a Justice Department lawyer admitted that the deportation had been a mistake. 'Whoever enters here doesn't leave' In the new court filing, Abrego described being the first person off an airplane in El Salvador after the Trump administration flew him there with more than 200 men on March 15. He recalled bright lights illuminating the airfield and cameras trained on him while officials forcefully guided him — shackled in chains — to a bus. The next day, Bukele triumphantly circulated cinematically edited videos of the deportees being handed over to Salvadoran authorities.

‘Shock and disbelief': U.S. citizen says ICE arrested her during Santa Ana park raid
‘Shock and disbelief': U.S. citizen says ICE arrested her during Santa Ana park raid

Los Angeles Times

time3 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

‘Shock and disbelief': U.S. citizen says ICE arrested her during Santa Ana park raid

Heidi Plummer, a U.S. citizen and Orange County attorney, strolled through Centennial Regional Park in Santa Ana on June 14 to clear her mind after a family funeral when she suddenly encountered an immigration raid. The park, with its vast grassy fields, playgrounds and artificial lake, usually bustles with families watching youth soccer games on weekends while push-cart vendors sell ice pops. 'There were families picnicking and spending time together,' Plummer said. 'But it was definitely a quiet day.' Out of view on the opposite end of the nearly 70-acre park, event organizers, city staffers and vendors welcomed guests to the city-sponsored Juneteenth Festival, which celebrated the end of chattel slavery. Plummer recounted seeing several vans pull into a big parking lot near where she walked, sometime between noon and 1 p.m. Masked federal agents poured out of the vans wearing tactical gear emblazoned with 'ICE' and made their way through the park. 'They were just grabbing people that were close to them and handcuffing them,' Plummer said. She stood only a few feet from the sweep, she said, when ICE agents approached and arrested her. Plummer said the federal agents didn't ask any questions before taking her personal belongings and leading her back to their vans. Plummer, who is half-Ecuadorian, began advising people of their rights after agents handcuffed her. In Spanish, she told those arrested by ICE not to answer any questions and to ask for a lawyer. Her advice continued after vans transported Plummer and other detainees to an ICE detention facility in Santa Ana. Agents had separated men from women in different vans. Plummer said that at the center she was held in a room without enough chairs for all the women detained. Agents called detainees up one by one. Plummer said she provided authorities with her identification. After about an hour-and-a-half, they returned her ID, cellphone and released her. A spokesperson for ICE did not respond to a TimesOC request for comment. After the raid, which the Daily Journal first reported, Plummer retained legal representation. 'It's pretty clear that it's racial profiling,' Jesse Rivera, an attorney representing Plummer, said of the raid. 'They're going in and just grabbing Latinos. It's a clear violation of these individuals' constitutional rights.' The raid appeared to have avoided drawing much attention in Santa Ana, Orange County's only sanctuary city. A spokesperson for the Santa Ana Police Department, which had personnel at the park during the Juneteenth Festival, was not aware of any raids that day. The Orange County Rapid Response Network, a coalition of ICE watching activists, did receive a tip about the Centennial Regional Park ICE raid, but did not have any photos or videos to put out a confirmed public alert. As a Santa Ana resident, Plummer reached out to Rep. Lou Correa, a Democrat representing the 46th congressional district, about her arrest. 'Being a U.S. citizen means something,' Correa said of Plummer. 'It means that under the U.S. Constitution, you have rights. Right now, it appears that none of those rights are being respected.' Correa recently introduced the No Secret Police Act that would require federal immigration agents, such as the ones Plummer said arrested her, to clearly display identification and be banned from wearing non-tactical face masks. 'Having masked individuals not identifying themselves, just jumping [out] at people, essentially racially profiling them, is creating a very dangerous situation here,' he said. Plummer's arrest is cited in a federal class action lawsuit filed Wednesday against the Trump administration by civil and immigrant rights groups alleging that the raids have, in part, 'led to numerous U.S. citizens who work, reside, or just happen to be in neighborhoods with large numbers of people of color also getting swept up.' Outside of the class action suit, Plummer, who is the vice president of the Orange County Women Lawyers Assn. and co-founder of the Newport Beach Bock & Plummer firm, is reviewing her legal options following the arrest. 'We're investigating this matter,' Rivera said. 'We're making the determination as to whether or not an action should be filed.' In the meantime, Plummer is still recovering from the harrowing ordeal. 'I've been going to Centennial Park my entire life,' she said. 'I was in utter shock and disbelief that this could happen to any U.S. citizen.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store